The run
keyword invokes a default or reconfigured rule on a disk group or file name, for example:
VxVM vxse:vxse_dg1 INFO V-5-1-5511 vxse_vxdg1 - RESULTS
----------------------------------------------------------
Disk group (mydg) okay amount of disks in this disk group (4)
This indicates that the specified disk group (mydg
) met the conditions specified in the rule.
See "Rule result types" on page 450.
You can set Storage Expert to run as a cron
job to notify administrators, and to archive reports automatically.
Running a rule generates output that shows the status of the objects that have been examined against the rule:
INFO
Information about the specified object; for example "RAID-5 does not have a log."
PASS
The object met the conditions of the rule.
VIOLATION
The object did not meet the conditions of the rule.
You can set attributes in the following ways:
# vxse_drl2 -d mydefaultsfile run
Lines in this file contain attribute values definitions for a rule in this format:
For example, the following entry defines a value of 20 gigabytes for the attribute large_mirror_size
of the rule vxse_drl2
:
vxse_drl2,large_mirror_size=20g
You can specify values that are to be ignored by inserting a # character at the start of the line, for example:
/etc/default/vxse
file. If you do this, make a backup copy of the file in case you need to regress your changes.
Attributes are applied using the following order of precedence from highest to lowest:
/etc/default/vxse
file that has not been commented out.